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High-Quality Programming Code Construction

Autumn Conference of the Bulgarian Oracle User Group (BGOUG), Pravetz, 19-Nov-2010. High-Quality Programming Code Construction. (for Java Developers). Revealing the Secrets of Self-Documenting Code. Svetlin Nakov. Telerik Corporation. www.telerik.com. Happy World Toilet Day.

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High-Quality Programming Code Construction

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  1. Autumn Conference of the Bulgarian Oracle User Group (BGOUG), Pravetz, 19-Nov-2010 High-Quality Programming Code Construction (for Java Developers) Revealing the Secrets of Self-Documenting Code Svetlin Nakov Telerik Corporation www.telerik.com

  2. Happy World Toilet Day 19 November – World Toilet Day Organized by the World Toilet Organization

  3. Table of Contents • What is High-Quality Programming Code? • Naming Identifiers • Code Formatting • High-Quality Classes • High-Quality Methods • Using Variables, Expressions, Constants, Loops and Conditional Statements Correctly • Defensive Programming • Comments and Documentation

  4. What is High-Quality Programming Code?

  5. Why the Code Quality Is Important? What does this code do? Is it correct? public static void main(String[ ]args) { int value= 010,i =5, w; switch ( value){ case 10:w=5;System.out.println(w);break;case 9:i=0;break; case 8:System.out. println("8 " );break; default :System.out.println("def ") ;{ System .out.println("hoho ") ;} for( int k =0 ;k < i ;k++,System. out . println(k - 'f'));break;} {System . out.println("loop!"); }}

  6. Why the Code Quality Is Important? (2) Now the code is formatted, but is still unclear. public static void main(String[] args) { int value = 010, i = 5, w; switch (value) { case 10: w = 5; System.out.println(w); break; case 9: i = 0; break; case 8: System.out.println("8 "); break; default: System.out.println("def "); System.out.println("hoho "); for (int k = 0; k < i; k++, System.out.println(k - 'f')); break; } System.out.println("loop!"); }

  7. What is High-Quality Programming Code? • High-quality programming code: • Easy to read and understand • Easy to modify and maintain • Correct behavior in all cases • Well tested • Well architectured and designed • Well documented • Self-documenting code • Well formatted

  8. Naming Identifiers Naming Classes, Interfaces, Enumerations, Methods, Variables and Constants

  9. Use Meaningful Names • Always prefer using meaningful names • Names should answer these questions: • What does this class do? What is the intent of this variable? What is this variable / class used for? • Examples: • FactorialCalculator, studentsCount, Math.PI, configFileName, createReport • Incorrect examples: • k, k2,k3,junk,f33,KJJ,button1, variable, temp, tmp, temp_var, something, someValue

  10. General Naming Guidelines • Always use English • How you will feel if you read Vietnamese code with variables named in Vietnamese? • English is the only language that all software developers speak • Avoid abbreviations • Example: scrpCnt vs. scriptsCount • Avoid hard-to-pronounce names • Example: dtbgRegExPtrn vs. dateTimeBulgarianRegExPattern

  11. The Length of Names • How long could be the name of a class / struct / interface / enum / method? • The name should be as long as required • Don't abbreviate the names if this could make them unclear • Your IDE has autocomplete, right? • Examples: FileNotFoundException, CustomerSupportNotificationService • Incorrect examples: FNFException, CustSuppNotifSrvc

  12. Naming Methods • Methods naming guidelines • Method names should be meaningful • Should answer the question: • What does this method do? • If you cannot find a good name for a method, think about does it have clear intent • Use camelCase • Examples: findStudent, loadReport, sinus • Incorrect examples: method1, doSomething, handleStuff, sampleMethod, dirtyHack

  13. Single Purpose of All Methods • Methods should always have a single purpose! • Otherwise they cannot be named well • How to name a method that creates annual incomes report, downloads updates from internet and scans the system for viruses? • createAnnualIncomesReportDownloadUpdatesAndScanForViruses is a nice name, right? • Methods that have multiple purposes (weak cohesion) are hard to be named • Need to be refactored instead of named

  14. Naming Variables • Variable names • Should be in camelCase • Preferred form: [Noun] or [Adjective] + [Noun] • Should explain the purpose of the variable • If you can't find good name for a variable check if it has a single purpose • Exception: variables with very small scope, e.g. the index variable in a 3-lines long for-loop • Names should be consistent in the project

  15. Naming Variables – Example • Examples: • firstName, report, usersList , fontSize, maxSpeed, font, startIndex, endIndex, charsCount, configSettingsXml, config, dbConnection, createUserSqlCommand • Incorrect examples: • foo, bar, p, p1, p2, populate, LastName, last_name, LAST_NAME, no_convertImage, MAXSpeed, _firstName, temp, temp2, _temp, firstNameMiddleNameAndLastName

  16. Temporary Variables • Do really temporary variables exist? • All variables in a program are temporary because they are used temporarily only during the program execution, right? • Temporary variables can always be named better than temp or tmp: // Swap a[i] and a[j] int temp = a[i]; a[i] = a[j]; a[j] = temp; // Swap a[i] and a[j] int oldValue = a[i]; a[i] = a[j]; a[j] = oldValue;

  17. The Length of Variable Names • How long could be the name of a variable? • Depends on the variable scope and lifetime • More "famous" variables should have longer and more self-explaining name • Acceptable naming examples: • Unacceptable naming examples: class Student { public String lastName; } for (int i=0; i<users.length; i++) if (i % 2 == 0) sum += users[i].getWeight(); class PairOfLists { private int count; } class Student { private int i; }

  18. Naming Constants • Use CAPITAL_LETTERS for final fields • Use meaningful names that describe their value • Examples: • Incorrect examples: private static final int READ_BUFFER_SIZE = 8192; public static final PageSize DEFAULT_PAGE_SIZE = PageSize.A4; private static final int FONT_SIZE_IN_POINTS = 16; public static final int MAX = 512; // Max what? Apples or Oranges? public static final int BUF256 = 256; // What about BUF256 = 1024? public static final String GREATER = "&gt;"; //GREATER_HTML_ENTITY public static final int FONT_SIZE = 16; // 16pt or 16px? public static final PageSize PAGE = PageSize.A4; // PAGE_SIZE

  19. Code Formatting

  20. Why Code Needs Formatting? import java.io.FileInputStream;import java .io. FileOutputStream;import java.io.IOException;import java .io.InputStream;import java.io . OutputStream;public class Test{public static void copyFileWithBuffer( String sourceFileName ,String destFileName )throws IOException{InputStream inputStream=new FileInputStream (sourceFileName );try{ OutputStream outputStream = new FileOutputStream(destFileName);try {byte [ ] buffer = new byte[64* 1024] ;int bytesRead ;while ((bytesRead=inputStream .read( buffer)) !=-1 ){outputStream.write(buffer,0,bytesRead ) ;}}finally { outputStream.close();}}finally {inputStream.close();}}}

  21. Code Formatting Fundamentals • Good formatting goals • To improve code readability • To improve code maintainability • Fundamental principle of code formatting: • Any formatting style that follows the above principle is good • Any other formatting is not good The formating of the source code should disclose its logical structure.

  22. Methods and Blocks Indentation • Methods should be indented with a single [Tab] from the class body • Methods body should be indented with a single [Tab] as well public class IndentationExample { private int Zero() { return 0; } } The entire method is indented with a single [Tab] Method body is also indented

  23. Good and Bad Formatting • Example: • Incorrect examples: for (int i=0; i<10; i++) { System.out.println("i=" + i); } for (int i=0; i<10; i++) System.out.println("i=" + i); for (int i=0; i<10; i++) System.out.println("i=" + i); for (int i=0; i<10; i++) { System.out.println("i=" + i); }

  24. Breaking Long Lines • Break long lines after punctuation • Indent the second line by double [Tab] • Do not additionally indent the third line • Examples: if (matrix[x, y] == 0 || matrix[x-1, y] == 0 || matrix[x+1, y] == 0 || matrix[x, y-1] == 0 || matrix[x, y+1] == 0) { // Code comes here indented by a sinlge [Tab] … DictionaryEntry<K, V> newEntry = new DictionaryEntry<K, V>( oldEntry.Key, oldEntry.Value);

  25. Incorrect Ways To BreakLong Lines if (matrix[x, y] == 0 || matrix[x-1, y] == 0 || matrix[x+1, y] == 0 || matrix[x, y-1] == 0 || matrix[x, y+1] == 0) { … if (matrix[x, y] == 0 || matrix[x-1, y] == 0 || matrix[x+1, y] == 0 || matrix[x, y-1] == 0 || matrix[x, y+1] == 0) { … DictionaryEntry<K, V> newEntry = new DictionaryEntry<K, V>(oldEntry .Key, oldEntry.Value);

  26. Code Alignment • All types of alignments are considered harmful • Alignments are hard-to-maintain! • Incorrect examples: Date date = new java.util.Date(); int count = 0; Student student = new Student(); List<Student> students = new ArrayList<Student>(); matrix[x, y] == 0; matrix[x + 1, y + 1] == 0; matrix[2 * x + y, 2 * y + x] == 0; matrix[x * y, x * y] == 0;

  27. High-Quality Classes How to Design High-Quality Classes? Abstraction, Cohesion and Coupling

  28. High-Quality Classes: Abstraction • Present a consistent level of abstraction in the class contract (publicly visible members) • What abstraction the class is implementing? • Does it represent only one thing? • Does the class name well describe its purpose? • Does the class define clear and easy to understand public interface? • Does the class hide all its implementation details?

  29. Good Abstraction – Example public class Font { public String name; public float sizeInPoints; public FontStyle style; public Font(String name, float sizeInPoints, FontStyle style) { this.setName(name); this.setSizeInPoints(sizeInPoints); this.setStyle(style); } … public void drawString(DrawingSurface surface, String str, int x, int y) { … } public Size measureString(String str) { … } }

  30. Bad Abstraction – Example Does this class really represent a "program"? Is this name good? public class Program { public String title; public int size; public Color color; public void initializeCommandStack(); public void pushCommand(Command command); public Command popCommand(); public void shutdownCommandStack(); public void initializeReportFormatting(); public void formatReport(Report report); public void printReport(Report report); public void initializeGlobalData(); public void shutdownGlobalData(); } Does this class really have a single purpose?

  31. Encapsulation • Minimize visibility of classes and members • Start from private and move to package, protected and public if required • Classes should hide their implementation details • A principle called encapsulation in OOP • Anything which is not part of the class public interface should be declared private • Never declare fields public (except constants) • Use methods or properties to access the fields

  32. High-Quality Methods How to Design and Implement High-Quality Methods? Understanding Cohesion and Coupling

  33. Why We Need Methods? • Methods are important in software development • Reduce complexity • Divide and conquer: complex problems can be split into composition of several simple ones • Improve code readability • Small methods with good method names make the code self-documenting • Avoid duplicating code • Duplicating code is hard to maintain

  34. Using Methods: Fundamentals • Fundamental principle of correct method usage: • Methods should do exactly what their names say • Nothing less • Nothing more • In case of incorrect input or incorrect preconditions, an exception should be raised A method should do what its name says or should throw and exception. Any other behaviour is incorrect!

  35. Good Methods – Examples long sum(int[] elements) { long sum = 0; for (int element : elements) { sum = sum + element; } return sum; } double calcTriangleArea(double a, double b, double c) { if (a <= 0 || b <= 0 || c <= 0) { throw new IllegalArgumentException( "Sides should be positive."); } double s = (a + b + c) / 2; double area = Math.sqrt(s * (s - a) * (s - b) * (s - c)); return area; }

  36. Wrong Methods – Examples long sum(int[] elements) { long sum = 0; for (int i = 0; i < elements.length; i++) { sum = sum + elements[i]; elements[i] = 0; } return sum; } Hidden side effect. Don’t do this! double calcTriangleArea(double a, double b, double c) { if (a <= 0 || b <= 0 || c <= 0) { return 0; } double s = (a + b + c) / 2; double area = Math.sqrt(s * (s - a) * (s - b) * (s - c)); return area; } Incorrect result. Throw an exception instead!

  37. Methods Length • How long should a method be? • There is no specific restriction • Avoid methods longer than one screen • One screen ≈ 30-40 lines • Cohesion and coupling are more important than the method length! • Long methods are not always bad • Be sure you have a good reason for their length

  38. Defensive Programming Handling Incorrect Input Correctly

  39. Principles of Defensive Programming • Fundamental principle of defensive programming • Defensive programming means: • To expect incorrect input and to handle it correctly • To think not only about the usual execution flow, but to consider also unusual situations • To ensure that incorrect input results to exception, not to incorrect output Any public method should check its input data, preconditions and postconditions

  40. Defensive Programming – Example public String Substring(String str, int startIndex, int count) { if (str == null) { throw new NullPointerException(“str is null."); } if (startIndex >= str.length()) { throw new IllegalArgumentException( "Invalid startIndex:" + startIndex); } if (startIndex + count > str.length()) { throw new IllegalArgumentException( "Invalid length:" + count); } … Debug.assert(result.length() == count); } Check the input and preconditions. Perform the method main logic. Check the postconditions.

  41. Exceptions – Best Practices • Choose a good name for your exception class • Incorrect example: • Example: • Use descriptive error messages • Incorrect example: • Example: throw new Exception("File error!"); throw new FileNotFoundException("Cannot find file " + fileName); throw new Exception("Error!"); throw new IllegalArgumentException("The speed should be " + "between " + MIN_SPEED + " and " + MAX_SPEED + ".");

  42. Coffee Break

  43. Cohesion and Coupling

  44. Strong Cohesion • Methods should have strong cohesion • Should address single task and address it well • Should have clear intent • Methods that address several tasks in the same time are hard to be named • Strong cohesion is used in engineering • In computer hardware any PC component handles a single task • E.g. hard disk performs a single task – storage

  45. Strong and Weak Cohesion • Strong cohesion: hard disk, CD-ROM, floppy • Weak cohesion: spaghetti code

  46. Strong Cohesion • Strong cohesion example: • Class Math that has methods and constants: • sin(), cos(), sqrt(), pow(), exp() • Math.PI, Math.E double sideA = 40, sideB = 69; double angleAB = Math.PI / 3; double sideC = Math.pow(sideA, 2) + Math.pow(sideB, 2) - 2 * sideA * sideB * Math.cos(angleAB); double sidesSqrtSum = Math.sqrt(sideA) + Math.sqrt(sideB) + Math.sqrt(sideC);

  47. Weak Cohesion • Example of weak cohesion • Class Magic that has all these methods: • Another example: public void printDocument(Document d); public void sendEmail(String recipient, String subject, String text); public void calculateDistanceBetweenPoints(int x1, int y1, int x2, int y2) MagicClass.makePizza("Fat Pepperoni"); MagicClass.withdrawMoney("999e6"); MagicClass.openDBConnection();

  48. Loose Coupling • What is loose coupling? • Minimal dependences of the method on the other parts of the source code • Minimal dependences on the class members or external classes and their members • No side effects • If the coupling is loose, we can easily reuse a method or group of methods in a new project • Tight coupling  spaghetti code

  49. Loose and Tight Coupling • Loose Coupling: • Easily replace old HDD • Easily place this HDD to another motherboard • Tight Coupling: • Where is the video card? • Can you change the video card?

  50. Loose Coupling – Example class Report { public bool loadFromFile(String fileName) {…} public bool saveToFile(String fileName) {…} } class Printer { public static int print(Report report) {…} } class LooseCouplingExample { public static void main(String[] args) { Report myReport = new Report(); myReport.loadFromFile("C:\\DailyReport.rep"); Printer.print(myReport); } }

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